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Improved Electrotransformation and Decreased Antibiotic Resistance of the Cystic Fibrosis Pathogen Burkholderia cenocepacia Strain J2315
Authors:Nelly Dubarry  Wenli Du  David Lane  Franck Pasta
Institution:Laboratoire de Microbiologie et Génétique Moléculaire, Université Paul Sabatier—Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 118 Route de Narbonne, 31062 Toulouse Cedex, France
Abstract:The bacterium Burkholderia cenocepacia is pathogenic for sufferers from cystic fibrosis (CF) and certain immunocompromised conditions. The B. cenocepacia strain most frequently isolated from CF patients, and which serves as the reference for CF epidemiology, is J2315. The J2315 genome is split into three chromosomes and one plasmid. The strain was sequenced several years ago, and its annotation has been released recently. This information should allow genetic experimentation with J2315, but two major impediments appear: the poor potential of J2315 to act as a recipient in transformation and conjugation and the high level of resistance it mounts to nearly all antibiotics. Here, we describe modifications to the standard electroporation procedure that allow routine transformation of J2315 by DNA. In addition, we show that deletion of an efflux pump gene and addition of spermine to the medium enhance the sensitivity of J2315 to certain commonly used antibiotics and so allow a wider range of antibiotic resistance genes to be used for selection.Burkholderia cenocepacia is part of the Burkholderia cepacia complex (Bcc), a group of closely related bacteria of soil, water, and roots (41) recently updated to at least 15 related species (42). Bcc displays many interesting features (see reference 27 for a review). Originally discovered as responsible for soft onion rot (3), Bcc species also interact beneficently with plants (see reference 34 for a review) and may degrade pollutants such as phthalate or the herbicide 2,4,5-trichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4,5,-T) (25, 33). But it is the emergence of Bcc as an opportunistic pathogen of people suffering from cystic fibrosis (CF) (19) and immunocompromizing conditions that has drawn most attention to these bacteria. Among Bcc species, Burkholderia multivorans and B. cenocepacia are the most prevalent in the epidemiology of CF. In particular, strains of the ET12 lineage of B. cenocepacia were responsible for a major transcontinental epidemic among CF patients in the 1990s (20), an outbreak aggravated by the high levels of resistance to nearly all antibiotics that characterizes Bcc. Species of the Bcc have large genomes (7 to 9 Mb) composed of two or three chromosomes and one or more plasmids, an unusual genomic organization among bacteria. The first Bcc genome to be sequenced was that of B. cenocepacia J2315 (also known as LMG16656), the type strain of the ET12 lineage and the reference strain for CF epidemiology; the sequence was completed and made available by the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in 2003. It revealed three chromosomes of 3.9, 3.2, and 0.9 Mb and a plasmid of 93 kb. The annotation of this genome was released recently (15).The pathogenicity and multipartite genome of B. cenocepacia make it an important subject for both practical and fundamental study. Genetic modification is essential to the success of many such investigations. Unfortunately, J2315 throws up major barriers to genetic manipulation. Standard electrotransformation techniques are ineffective with this strain, as also found elsewhere (26). Conjugal introduction of DNA has proved unreliable despite adaptations (7) that have enabled occasional successes with B. cenocepacia species (9, 40) including J2315 (39) (see also Results below). Besides, the natural resistance of J2315 to antibiotics, high even on the scale of the generally extensive resistance of B. cenocepacia species (31), severely restricts the use of antibiotic resistance in genetic selections. Circumventing these problems by resorting to a proxy strain, B. cenocepacia K56-2, that has not been sequenced and is more permissive to gene transfer (26, 17, 32, 9) runs the risk that results will be of uncertain relevance to J2315.In the context of our general aim to decipher the role of the four replicon-specific ParABS systems of J2315 (6), we have sought to overcome these obstacles. We report here the reproducible electrotransformation of J2315, and we analyze factors that improve its efficiency. We report also our isolation of a J2315 derivative with reduced antibiotic resistance and the broadened selection possibilities this offers. Detailed protocols are provided which should facilitate studies of this pathogen.
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